SB Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common type of hernia? What are the subtypes? How can you tell them Apart?

A

Inguinal - abdo cavity contents -> inguinal canal

  • direct 20% bowel through weakness posterior wall (Hesselbach’s triangle) older
    Medial to epigastric vessels (at surgery)
  • indirect 80% bowel enters through deep In ring (incomplete closure processus vaginalis) congenital
    Lateral to Epi V

Reduce -> place pressure deep in ring -> cough - if protrudes indicates direct,unreliable

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2
Q

Borders of the inguinal canal

A

Roof - IO & TA
Anterior wall - aponeurosis EO
Posterior wall - transversalis fascia
Floor - inguinal ligament

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3
Q

Complications of hernias

A

Normally reducible - disappear minimal pressure/ lying down, cough impulse

  • incarcerated painful, tender, erythematous
  • bowel obstruction
  • strangulation (blood supply compromised, irreducible, pain out of proportion to signs +/- obstruction)
    ✅urgent surgical exploration
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4
Q

Inguinal vs femoral hernia location

A

Inguinal - superomedial to pubic tubercle

Femoral - inferolateral PT

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5
Q

What are femoral hernias? Who gets them?

A

Abdominal viscera/ omentum -> femoral ring -> femoral canal potential space

Women 3:1
Multiparous
Chronic constipation/ heavy lifting etc
Older

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6
Q

Borders of the femoral canal

A

Anterior - Inguinal L
Posterior - pectineus
Lateral - femoral V
Medial - lacunar L

Superior - femoral ring

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7
Q

How are femoral hernias managed?

A

All need surgical intervention

Routine pre-op investigations:
USS
CT abdo pelvis
Doubt - surgically explored

2WW surgery:
High risk strangulation (3months 22%, 21months 45%)

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8
Q

Borders of femoral triangle

Contents

A

Superior - Inguinal ligament
Lateral - Medial sartorius
Medial - Medial adductor longus

Lateral-> medial
NAVEL

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9
Q

Where does an epigastric hernia occur?

A

Upper midline through linea Alba
Typically secondary raised IAP
Midline mass disappears lying back

Not to be confused with divarication of recti (linea Alba stretched & weakened but intact)

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10
Q

Where does a paraumbilical hernia occur? Who gets umbilical hernias?

A

Through linea Alba in umbilical region
Typically secondary raised chronic IAP
Generally contain pre-peritoneal fat, can contain bowel

Umbilical hernias - children mostly, omohalocele/ gastroschisis

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11
Q

Viral causes of gastroenteritis

A

Norovirus - RNA, most common, abdo cramps, watery diarrhoea, vomiting 1-3days

Rotavirus - DS RNA, 1st infants
<1 week

Adenovirus - DNA, children

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12
Q

Bacterial causes of gastroenteritis

A

Campylobacter - gram -ve bacillus
Most common cause food poisoning
Fatigue, fever, myalgia, cramps, D, N
Can: reactive arthritis, GBS, haemolytic ureamic syndrome, thrombocytopaenic purpura

E.Coli - gram -ve bacillus, food/ animals/ ppl, most common travellers diarrhoea

Salmonella - gram -ve, bacillus, fever, N&V, cramps, bloody diarrhoea

Shigella - gram -ve bacillus, fever, pain, rectal pain, bloody D

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13
Q

Bacterial toxin causes of gastroenteritis

A

Symptoms last <24hrs

  • staphylococcus aureus
    Cooked meat/ cream
  • bacillus cereus
    Reheated rice, rapid N&V
  • clostridium perfringes
    D

-vibrio cholera
Water, watery D

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14
Q

Parasitic causes of gastroenteritis

A

Cryptosporidium
Watery D, cramps

Entamoeba histolytica
Blood D, pain, fever
-> amoebic liver abscess

Giardia intestinalis

Schistosoma
Contaminated water
Month after initial infection
Fever, malaise, pain, bloody D, hepatosplenomegaly, eosinophilia

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15
Q

Most common cause hospital acquired gastroenteritis & treatment

A

C. Difficult

Gram +ve

Following broad spec ABs

✅IV fluid
Oral metronidazole

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16
Q

Non infective causes of gastroenteritis

A

Radiation colitis

IBD

Microscopic colitis

Chronic ischaemic colitis

17
Q

Important causes of dysentery

A

Campylobacter
Shigella
Salmonella
Norovirus

18
Q

What is angiodysplasia, how does it present?

A

Formation arteriole nouns malformations
Most commonly caecum/ ascending colon

  • 6% lower GI bleeds (haematochezia)
  • 8% upper GI bleeds (haematemesis/ melena)
  • 2nd common cause Pr bleed >60yr
  • AS incidentally colonoscopy 10%
  • painless occult PR bleed majority
  • acute haemorrhage 10-15%
  • anaemia

Acquired - reduced submucosal V drainage -> loss pre capillary sphincter competency
Congenital

19
Q

Management angiodysplasia

A

10% major bleed - managed

Conservatively - rest, IV fluid, tranexamic acid

Persistent/ severe:
Endoscopy + coagulation
Mesenteric angiography + catheterisation & embolisation

Minority surgery:
Resection, anastomoses

20
Q

What are gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumours?

A

Tumours originating from neuroendocrine cells (receive input from neurotransmitters -> release hormones) in tubular GI tract & pancreas

21
Q

How do gastroenteropancreatic tumours present?

A

Non-specific symptoms
Vague abdo pain, N&V, abdo distension

Some cases bowel obstruction

WL
Palpable abdo mass
Underlying inherited disorder

Carcinoid syndrome - metastasis -> oversecrete bioactive mediators -> flushing, abdo pain, D, wheezing, palpitations